ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1974 and the recipient of the Denis Carroll Book Prize at the World Congress of the International Criminology Society in 1978, Thomas Mathiesen’s The Politics of Abolition is a landmark text in critical criminology. In its examination of Scandinavian penal policy and call for the abolition of prisons, this book was enormously influential across Europe and beyond among criminologists, sociologists and legal scholars, as well as advocates of prisoners’ rights.

Forty years on and in the context of mass incarceration in many parts of the world, this book remains relevant to a new generation of penal scholars. This new edition includes a new introduction from the author, as well as an afterword that collects contributions from leading criminologists and inmates from Germany, England, Norway and the United States to reflect on the development and current state of the academic literature on penal abolition.

This book will be suitable for academics and students of criminology and sociology, as well as those studying political science. It will also be of great interest to those who read the original book and are looking for new insights into an issue that is still as important and topical today as it was forty years ago.

part |42 pages

Introduction: The Politics of Abolition Revisited

part |15 pages

About KROM – the starting point

part |22 pages

Five major theoretical issues

part |201 pages

The Politics of Abolition (1974)

part |25 pages

The unfinished

chapter I|15 pages

The unfinished

chapter II|8 pages

On action research

part |78 pages

Pressure group and social structure

chapter III|6 pages

Background

part |95 pages

Organization among the expelled

chapter VI|72 pages

Organization among the expelled

chapter VII|11 pages

On the negative

part |81 pages

Scholars and prisoners on prisons

chapter 1|7 pages

Thomas Mathiesen

Activism as an exercise of public intellect

chapter 2|7 pages

The politics of abolition

Effects on the criminal sociology and criminal policy debate in West Germany

chapter 3|10 pages

Abolition in the times of pre-crime

A view from Germany

chapter 4|13 pages

Prisoners speak out

chapter 5|11 pages

Abolitionism and reform: a possible combination?

Notes on a Norwegian experiment

chapter 7|8 pages

Are we really witnessing the end of mass incarceration?

The strange politics of prisons in America

chapter 8|7 pages

No data, no change

Bringing prisons out of hiding

chapter 9|7 pages

Afterword

Abolishing the architecture and alphabet of fear